Friday, December 3, 2010

Wish you were here (E.T.)

That I am a devoted fan of Pink Floyd is no mystery to the readership of this blog (all three of you). I have repeatedly mentioned names and places related to the greatest band of them all in various past posts, including a (personal) obituary for the late Rick Wright. Having a particular strange tendency for both visual and audial connections it was then very easy for me to spot the missing link behind NASA's Astrobiology lab latest discovery.

According to this, the first living organism to be able to incorporate arsenic instead of phosphorus in its genetic material, was recently isolated in lake Mono in Southern California. The bacterion, whose name (GFAJ-1) comes as yet another proof that people in NASA may provide a whole new level to the definition of dullness, was the object of a greatly anticipated press conference which circulated media feeds and e-mail boxes all over the globe yesterday. People who were let down by the fact that the press release (initially making explicite mention to "the search for evidence of extraterrestrial life") turned out to be about an insignificant bug with an utterly boring name should think twice.

A long time before NASA turned to Lake Mono in desperate search for extra-terrestrial life, Pink Floyd had used its surroundings in a famous photo by Storm Thorgerson which appeared at the back cover of their "Wish you were here" album. This is the snapshot of a diver immersing in the alkaline, toxic but calm and ripless waters of Lake Mono. (And judging from the concentration of arsenic in these waters, I can only hope that the photo is the outcome of some artistic superposition of images.)

Whether the existence of extra terrestrial life was something that concerned Pink Floyd at the time, or whether it was the unwordly atmosphere of the environment that matched their nostalgic title of the album, I dare not speculate. However, the inconcistency with which the scientists announce a talk about alien life only to provide us with an example of what can only be terrestrial (even though underwater) can only make me think that in their quest for E.T, the guys in NASA maybe constantly thinking how they "wish he was here".

1 comment:

  1. "Είναι πολλά τα λεφτά, Άρη".
    :-))

    Λες να είχε καμία ελπίδα για χρηματική επιχορήγηση η NASA, αν ανακοίνωνε απλά "βρήκαμε ένα βακτήριο που έχει αντικαταστήσει το φώσφορο με αρσενικό";

    Τώρα που το σκέφτoμαι, και εγώ στην επόμενη αίτησή μου για χρηματοδότηση, θα γράψω ότι η έρευνά μου θα προωθήσει τα φάρμακα για καρκίνο, για AIDS, νέες τεχνολογίες για GMOs [αυτά τα γράφω πάντα], αλλά ΚΑΙ την γνώση μας για τους εξωγήινους!

    ;-)

    Idom

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